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The judges who will be trying former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
on Wednesday have been secretly trained in Britain in recent months, the Times
reported on Tuesday.
The International Bar Association confirmed that it had helped train the 20
Iraqi judges who make up the Special Tribunal, including the five sitting for
Saddam's trial. Training was also held for 23 prosecutors.
The project included simulated trials at which the judges were split over
whether life imprisonment or the death penalty should be imposed.
Stuart Alford, one of the British barristers who helped with the training,
said: "The judges are all very experienced and some have considerable experience
as trial judges. They know they have a great responsibility upon them and they
have a great desire to do the right thing."
However, he added, none had any experience of this kind of international law
before.
Alford believed that, if Saddam were found guilty, the death penalty would
be likely.
The training, run by judges and lawyers from countries including Sweden, the
Netherlands, Australia, and the United States, was aimed at explaining international
criminal law and how it could be seen in the context of the civil code system
of criminal law in Iraq. The Iraqi judges were very keen to "set out why,
as an Islamic country, they believed the death penalty to be entirely right,"
said Alford.
Saddam's main defense team will be absent at the trial opening and are expected
to claim that the Special Tribunal appointed to hear the case has ignored basic
legal procedures.
Abdul Haq al-Ani, the British-trained barrister appointed to defend
the ousted Iraqi dictator, said he had been denied access to his client, that
the defense had not formally received details of the charges and that the court
had not answered one defense application in the past year.
"It is going to be a political show-trial," he said.
Saddam and seven members of his regime are to appear in court on Wednesday
morning to face 19 charges of killing 143 Iraqi civilians from Dujail village
of Dujail, north of Baghdad.
Last week, it was reported that British lawyer Anthony Scrivener has been
approached to lead the defense. But both men will be in London when the trial
opens.